Tsirona

View Original

What the Numbers on the Scale Really Mean

We all know the frustration of working hard to maintain a healthy body weight, only to step on the bathroom scale and see the numbers going in the wrong direction - or not quickly enough in the right direction! 

Here are 6 truths about those annoyingly normal daily weight fluctuations

1| Scale weight is not a true measurement of your health. It is simply one of many variables you should be taking into account to determine if you are approaching or maintaining your optimal body weight.

2| When you wake up after fasting - usually for around 12 hours - you're completely dehydrated and at your lowest weight of the day. This is why it’s recommended to weigh yourself first thing in the morning after you’ve used the bathroom and before you eat or drink anything.  

3| Speaking of using the bathroom, you can experience daily weight fluctuations of 1-3+ lbs due to waste that could be lingering in your large colon. Who knew poop could be so heavy?

Be sure to keep the bowels moving with plenty of fluids, plant-based fiber, and targeted supplementation, if necessary. Talk to your doctor if you’re interested in supplementation or if you find you have persistent constipation.

4| Your scale doesn't just weigh fat. It weighs muscle, bone, organs, water, and as you just learned, poop!  

When you lose weight, it doesn't necessarily mean that you've lost body fat, as the average bathroom scale has no way of telling you what bodily tissues you've lost. Weighing light on the scale does not always translate into healthy off the scale.

FACT: The more muscle you have, the more energy your body burns, even when you're just sitting around - due to the fact that it’s a metabolically active tissue. That's one reason why a fit, active person is generally able to eat more than say the chronic dieter who is unknowingly breaking down and losing muscle.

5| Likewise, the scale can't tell if you've gained muscle. Building muscle makes it possible to drop clothing sizes (and lose inches) without a significant change, if any, in scale weight. 

THINK OF IT LIKE THIS: a pound of muscle is like a small, compact brick, whereas a pound of fat is like a bulky, lumpy pillow. So that's why when you gain muscle and lose fat, your figure appears slimmer and more firm - but your scale weight may not change much.

6| Some women can gain up to 10 lbs right before or during their period. No joke. This is because of the natural drop in progesterone just before your period often causes digestive issues like water retention and constipation.  

Our bodies also tend to lose Magnesium in the days before menstruation, which drives our Insulin levels up leading to an increase in food cravings - especially for sugar. Insulin is a hormone made by the pancreas that keeps blood sugar levels in check but is also considered a fat storage hormone.

THE BOTTOM LINE: these yo-yoing numbers may have nothing to do with your long-term progress and they are just part of the overall health optimization journey. Simply do your best to maintain an overall healthy lifestyle and understand that daily weight fluctuations are completely normal!

 “The scale can only give you a numerical reflection of your relationship with gravity. That’s it.

It cannot measure beauty, talent, purpose, life force, possibility, strength or love.”

— Steve Maraboli

See this gallery in the original post